From: Marcus L. <ma...@ya...> - 2011-05-02 09:17:08
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Carsten Neumann skrev 2011-04-08 21:42: > Hello Dirk, > > On 04/08/2011 10:22 AM, Dirk Reiners wrote: >> Just as a thought experiment, what would it take to have a web application that >> could connect to an OpenSG program on a server and receive RemoteAspect syncs >> through HTTP? Would that be something interesting to try? > > i'm probably missing something because of lack of understanding how web > applications in a browser work, but to do something useful with > RemoteAspects syncs on the client side you'd need to have an OpenSG > scene graph where you apply them. Doesn't that require either a JS > implementation of OpenSG or at least JS bindings? You need something that parse the RemoteAspect into something a javascript library/client can handle, yes. That could be an OpenSG-implementation in JS, or something more lightweight provided that the Server (C++) does some processing with the RemoteAspect data to make it more suitable for the web-client JS-lib to work with. Intriguing concept. And since WebGL is (mostly?) GL ES 2.0, there aren't _that_ many core/buffer/object types to manage, compared to what OpenSG offers. > Bindings probably have the issue that you'd still need the user to > execute native code that back the bindings, so a plugin would be required? Yup. /Marcus |